Salad of charcuterie with edible flowers from Terry’s garden, grown by him from seeds. And a clafoutis of mirabelles (yellow cherries/plums/prunes) from my parents’ garden in Long Ashton, Bristol. Each dish prepared by Terry and enjoyed outdoors by us both.
The first of the autumn storms meant I've been effectively marooned in Brighton today and tonight. The storm passed over last night and as the forecasts were predicting dire damage, the rail network closed down. There seems to have been nothing more than a couple of trees in various places but that's been enough for a day on either no service or just the emergency service that's almost nothing.
We got out before the storm to the delightful Sheffield Park and I've attached my postcard of the trip.
After a couple of days of welcome spring sunshine, it’s a wet Sunday morning in Keswick. So here’s my interpretation of Keswick’s aerial tower, that my host Mike describes as “Keswick’s answer to the Eiffel Tower”. In reality, it’s a rather local fill-in transmitter for terrestrial television plus a measly amount of 2G and 3G coverage for Keswick in the Lake District, Cumbria.
A spring walk in Hyde Park, London: sculptures, screeches of wild parakeets from the trees, people walking their dogs, and magnificent artichoke plants in the flower beds.
Comic Relief 2013 was one of the last shows to be made and transmitted live from the BBC Television Centre in Wood Lane, London W12. Here's my picture of the increasingly rare sight of fans queueing for tickets to the live show from the BBC studios. Once a common sight but now increasingly rare as Television Centre winds down its productions prior to its redevelopment by a property company from April 2013.
The live show featured appearances from singer Jessie J, comedian Peter Kay, boy band One Direction, Hollywood star Hugh Grant and veteran comedian Ronnie Corbett. Comic Relief 2013 raised a record £74.3 million for charities.